Ethiopian adds Manchester as UK-Africa capacity rises

Ethiopian’s national carrier is to start a service to Manchester Airport later this year, providing connections to more than 58 countries across the African continent.

The route will start on 1 December 2018 and be operated by Boeing 787 with business and economy classes, initially transiting via Brussels.

“We are elated to start services to Manchester, our second destination in the UK next to London Heathrow which we have been serving since 1973,” said Tewolde Gebremariam, chief executive of Ethiopian Airlines.

“The socio-economic implication of the new flight is immense. With vast investment and trade potentials between Africa and the UK, the upcoming flight holds the promise of boosting trade, investment and tourism with ample business opportunities for investors and business people from both regions.”


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Ethiopian operates a daily non-stop service between London Heathrow and Addis Ababa on an A350-900 aircraft.

The planned Manchester route comes as the number of air services between the UK and Africa is increasing, largely thanks to leisure carriers reintroducing routes to North African countries affected by terrorism in 2015.

These include Thomas Cook Airlines and TUI Airways, which have begun operations to Enfidha in Tunisia from Birmingham, Bristol, Glasgow International, London Gatwick, London Stansted, Manchester and Newcastle.

Other new UK-Africa routes include British Airways' introduction of a London Heathrow-Seychelles service in March, while the airline will launch a three-weekly London Heathrow-Durban route in October.

According to figures from OAG Schedules Analyser, two-way capacity between the UK and Africa is set to grow to 6.9 million available seats in 2018, up from 6.3 million last year.

Egypt leads the way in terms of year-on-year rise, with an increase of more than 200,000 available seats this year, compared with 2017. Tunisia is second with 187,000 more seats on offer this year, while Morocco has 142,000 more.

UK-Africa two-way capacity and frequencies:

https://infogram.com/uk-africa-capacity-2008-17-1h0n25x1jejz4pe

Speaking about the Ethiopian route from Manchester, the airport's chief executive Andrew Cowan added the service would “provide vital connectivity” to one of the continent’s most important hub airports.

“That will unlock dozens more destinations across Africa through Ethiopian Airlines’ unrivalled network,” he said.

The flight will leave Manchester at 19:00, arriving at Addis Ababa Bole International Airport at 06:00. On the return it departs Addis Ababa at 00:45 and arrives in Manchester at 06:55.

Top ten UK-Africa routes during the first half of 2018 by two-way seat capacity:

Rank Route Two-way capacity H1 2018
1 London Heathrow - Johannesburg Tambo 527963
2 London Heathrow - Cairo International 248912
3 London Heathrow - Lagos 212570
4 London Heathrow - Nairobi Jomo Kenyatta 207039
5 London Gatwick - Marrakech 203500
6 London Heathrow - Cape Town 185013
7 London Heathrow - Addis Ababa 133028
8 London Heathrow - Accra 121746
9 London Gatwick - Hurghada 111697
10 Manchester - Hurghada

86972



David Casey

David Casey is Editor in Chief of Routes, the global route development community's trusted source for news and information.